On her father in 3D: 'There's nothing in the works at the moment'

Lisa Marie Presley brought the tour for her recently released album, Storm & Grace, to her hometown of Los Angeles last week, delivering a confident set for a sold-out crowd at the Roxy Theatre. "It's more nerve-racking for me because mostly it's family, friends, industry, label," she tells Rolling Stone. "It's easier to play for a room full of people you don't know, for me at least. Playing for my family and people I know, I can feel what they're thinking and it throws me off."

Few musicians have had to face the pressures Lisa Marie Presley has had to endure over her career.

Being the daughter of Elvis Presley created a whole slew of unchartered challenges that left her struggling at times to find her own sound, separate from her famous father or from expectations brought on by record executives.

It took a collaboration with famed folk producer T-Bone Burnett to bring out Presley's true musical roots. The result is a 15-track blues/country record that has Presley performing alongside Burnett's backing band.

Lisa Marie Presley having a music career is a can’t-win situation. Even if she’s good – as she was Monday in kicking off her first tour in more than five years at Philadelphia’s World Café Live – the standard against which she’s measured is her father, Elvis, the King of Rock and Roll.

The audience was dancing, too. And can’t-win be damned, it was a winner.